Jun 2007 - Highly Integrated USB Power Manager with Li-Ion Charger and Three Step-Down Switching Regulators in 4mm x 4mm QFN

DESIGN FEATURES L
Highly Integrated USB Power Manager
with Li-Ion Charger and Three
Step-Down Switching Regulators
in 4mm × 4mm QFN
by Amit Lele
Introduction
Mobile technology has radically
changed the way we acquire, share
and disseminate information. Modern,
feature-rich handheld and portable
devices require several power management circuits, including a battery
charger, multiple step-down switching
regulators and low power LDOs for
watchdog circuitry. If each of these
functions is served by a separate power
supply IC, each IC (and its external
components) occupies valuable board
space, consumes battery-draining
quiescent current and significantly
increases the overall development
and material costs of the device. The
LTC3557 solves this problem by bringing all power management functions
into a single device. It combines a full
featured USB power manager, a Li-ion
battery charger, three high frequency
step-down switching regulators and a
3.3V always-on LDO in a single 4mm
× 4mm QFN package.
Features
The LTC3557 is a highly integrated
power management and battery charger IC for single cell Li-Ion/Polymer
battery applications. Table 1 high-
lights some of the key features of the
LTC3557.
The LTC3557 can derive power from
a current limited input such as USB.
The programmable current limit is set
by a single external resistor (RCLPROG)
on the CLRPOG pin and the logic state
of ILIM0 and ILIM1 pins. Table 2 shows
the different operating modes of the
input current limit.
The 1A (10x) mode is reserved for
use with a higher current input power
supply such as an AC wall adapter.
Alternatively, power can be directly
provided to the system load (VOUT)
via an external PFET connected in
Table 1. Features of the LTC3557
Feature
Benefits
PowerPath Control
Allows seamless transition between input power sources (Li-Ion battery, USB, wall
adapter or high voltage buck regulator) to supply system load.
WALL Input
Provides power from 5V wall adapter directly to system load through an external
low impedance PFET
USB Input
Precision input current limit which communicates with the battery charger to
ensure that input current never violates the USB specification
High Voltage Buck Control with Bat-Track™
Controls external HV buck to expand input voltage range up to 38V. The Bat-Track
feature allows efficient charging of the battery to minimize heat dissipation in the
application
Li-Ion Charger
Uses constant current/constant voltage architecture with thermal regulation for
optimal charging. Preset float voltage accurate to 0.85%.
Temperature qualified charging using NTC
Disables charging of the battery under extreme temperature conditions outside a
programmable range
Internal Safety Timer
Limits maximum charge cycle to 4 hours
CHRG Fault Reporting
Four modes of CHRG pin including ON, OFF, Slow Blink and Fast Blink to report
various operating states
Three High Efficiency Step-Down Switching
Regulators
High frequency switching (2.25MHz) stays out of the AM band and enables use
of tiny inductors. Internally compensated to save valuable board space. Userprogrammable output voltages with external resistor divider. Power on Reset output
for power sequencing.
Always on 3.3V LDO
Ultra low quiescent current 3.3V LDO for real time clock, standby power,
pushbutton control, etc.
Linear Technology Magazine • June 2007
25
L DESIGN FEATURES
series with an AC wall adapter. The
input supply range can be expanded
by using an appropriate high voltage
buck regulator as shown in Figure 1.
The LTC3557 takes over the control
of buck regulator via the VC pin and
sets the VOUT pin voltage at a fixed
offset above the battery voltage. This
Bat-Track feature charges the battery
at the highest efficiency. Absent all
other input power sources, the battery
provides power to the system (VOUT)
through an internal 200mΩ ideal
diode. An optional external <50mΩ
ideal diode can be used to minimize
the voltage drop from BAT to VOUT in
high current applications.
The LTC3557 charger circuitry uses
constant current/constant voltage
architecture to optimize the charging
of the battery. The battery charge
current is set by an external resistor
(RPROG) connected to the PROG pin
as follows:
ICHG ( A) =
A Typical Application
Figure 2 shows a typical application
using the LTC3557. In this configuration, the LTC3557 automatically
switches between the high voltage
buck power supply or the USB/5V
wall adapter. The USB input current
is programmed to nominal value of
476mA using a 2.1k resistor on the
26
SW
FB
C
VC
WALL
ACPR
SYSTEM
LOAD
VOUT
LTC3557/LTC3557-1
OPTIONAL
EXTERNAL
IDEAL DIODE
PMOS
GATE
BAT
+
Li-Ion
BATTERY
Figure 1. High voltage buck control using VC
HVIN
8V TO 38V
4
4.7µF
68nF
150k
5
10
1000 V
RPROG
The LTC3557 includes several safety mechanisms to handle situations
when the available input current is less
than the programmed charge current.
This allows the system designer to set
the charge current based on normal
operating conditions rather than reducing the charging current to account
for worst-case scenarios. These safety
mechanisms are explained in more
detail in the “Getting the Priorities
Right” section below.
The LTC3557 includes three stepdown switching regulators capable of
delivering up to 600mA. Additionally,
an always-on LDO with fixed 3.3V
output voltage can deliver up to 25mA
of load current. This can be used to
power watchdog circuitry or other low
power circuitry.
HIGH VOLTAGE
BUCK
REGULATOR
VIN
LT3480, LT3481
V OR LT3505
VIN
UP TO 38V
TRANSIENTS
TO 60V
40.2k
NC
7
VIN
BOOST
LT3480
RUN/SS
RT
SW
SYNC
BD
PG
FB
GND
0.47µF
3
6
DFLS240L
24
10µF
22µF
100k
8
Si2333DS
3
25
VC WALL ACPR
VBUS
VOUT
BVIN1
2.1k 27
20
100k 18
19
100k
NTC
CLPROG BVIN2
PROG
CHRG
GATE
BAT
VNTC
NTC
LDO3V3
VOUT
23
6
16
1
2
9
10
11
8
SW1
ILIM0
ILIM1
FB1
EN1
EN2
SW3
EN3
MODE
FB3
RST2
SW2
GND
FB2
10µF
2.2µF
510Ω
2.2µF
28
21
Si2333DS
(OPT)
22
4
LTC3557/
LTC3557-1
PMIC
CONTROL
499k
1
9
26
2k
6.8µH
VC
11
USB OR
5V WALL
ADAPTER
OPTIONAL HIGH VOLTAGE
BUCK INPUT
2
5
3.3V
25mA
1µF ALWAYS ON
BAT
Li-Ion
3.3µH
10pF
7
17
+
1.02M
324k
4.7µH
10pF
12
806k
649k
14
15
13
VOUT1
3.3V
10µF 600mA
VOUT3
1.8V
10µF 400mA
RST2
100k
4.7µH
10pF
232k
464k
VOUT2
1.2V
10µF 400mA
29
Figure 2. Typical application circuit for LTC3557
Linear Technology Magazine • June 2007
DESIGN FEATURES L
FROM AC ADAPTER (OR HIGH VOLTAGE BUCK OUTPUT)
26
3
WALL
4.3V
(RISING)
3.2V
(FALLING)
–
+
ACPR
+
–
+
–
FROM
USB
24
VC
OPTIONAL CONTROL
FOR HIGH VOLTAGE BUCK REGS
LT3480, LT3481 OR LT3505
25
75mV (RISING)
25mV (FALLING)
ENABLE
VBUS
VOUT
VOUT
23
SYSTEM
LOAD
USB CURRENT LIMIT
IDEAL
DIODE
CONSTANT CURRENT
CONSTANT VOLTAGE
BATTERY CHARGER
+
–
–
+
GATE
OPTIONAL
EXTERNAL
IDEAL DIODE
PMOS
21
15mV
BAT
BAT
22
+
35571 F01
Li-Ion
Figure 3. Simplified PowerPath block diagram
CLPROG pin. The charge current is
programmed to 500mA using a 2k
resistor on PROG pin. The resistor
network on the NTC pin sets the
battery charging temperature range
from 0°C to 40°C based on R-T curve
1 characteristics for the 100k NTC
thermistor. An LED on the CHRG pin
provides battery charging and status
information.
VOUT1 is set to 3.3V to drive higher
power applications such as I/O or disk
drives. VOUT3 is set to 1.8V to drive medium power applications while VOUT2 is
set to 1.2V to drive a microprocessor
core. The RST2 output can be used to
provide power supply sequencing using the PMIC control pins. The optional
external ideal diode can be used to
provide a lower impedance path from
BAT to VOUT for applications that draw
heavy loads from the battery.
Table 2. Controlled input current limit
ILIM1
ILIM0
IBUS(LIM)
0
0
100mA(1x)
0
1
1A(10x)
1
0
SUSPEND
1
1
500mA(5x)
Linear Technology Magazine • June 2007
Safety Timer and Automatic Recharge
An internal safety timer shuts off all
charge current to the battery after 4
hours of charging. As long as the load
current at VOUT does not exceed the
current available from the external
power source, the battery remains fully
charged. If the load current at VOUT
exceeds the current available from
the external power source, the extra
current is pulled from the battery. This
VNTC
Getting the Priorities Right
The USB specification has very strict
restrictions on the maximum current
that can be pulled out of the bus. For
this reason the LTC3557 provides
load prioritization on the system load
NTC BLOCK
18
RNOM
100k
NTC
causes the battery to discharge and if
the battery voltage drops below 100mV
of its float voltage (4.2V for LTC3557
or 4.1V for LTC3557-1), an automatic
recharge cycle is initiated.
0.765 • VVNTC
–
TOO_COLD
19
+
RNTC
100k
–
0.349 • VVNTC
TOO_HOT
+
+
NTC_ENABLE
0.017 • VVNTC
–
Figure 4. Temperature qualified charging using NTC
27
L DESIGN FEATURES
(VOUT) as shown in Figure 3. Power
is always prioritized at VOUT and the
battery charge current is automatically
dialed back so that the USB current
limit is never exceeded. This feature
enables the battery charge current to
be programmed to normal operating
conditions rather than worst case
load on VOUT.
The charge current is also automatically dialed back at high temperatures
to prevent the part from overheating.
Additionally, if VOUT starts to drop
due to heavy load, the charge current
is dialed back to maintain VOUT near
VBUS. If the system load exceeds the
programmed USB current limit, the
additional current needed is drawn
from the battery. Power provided directly to VOUT pin via the WALL input
is prioritized over USB power as USB
power is current limited.
Status Symbols
The CHRG pin provides valuable information regarding the status of battery
charging. The CHRG pin is an open
drain output that is pulled low during a
normal charge cycle. When the charge
current reduces to one tenth of the
programmed value of charge current
(C/10) the CHRG pin is let go and is
pulled high by the external pull-up
device to the appropriate rail voltage.
Two Fault modes are also encoded
on to the CHRG output. If the battery
voltage fails to rise above 2.85V even
after charging it for a half hour, it is
deemed to be a bad battery and this
fault is reported at the CHRG pin as
a fast blink (6Hz signal modulated at
35kHz). Temperature qualified charging can be enabled with an external
resistor divider on the VNTC and NTC
pins as shown in Figure 4. This defines
a range of temperatures for charging
the battery and is a function of the
thermal characteristics of the NTC
resistor. When the battery temperature
is outside the defined range, an NTC
fault is indicated at the CHRG pin by a
slow blinking (1.5Hz signal modulated
at 35KHz).
Step-Down Switching Regulators
The LTC3557 includes three internally compensated 2.25MHz
constant-frequency current-mode
step-down switching regulators providing 600mA, 400mA and 400mA
each. All step-down switching regulators can be programmed for a
minimum output voltage of 0.8V and
can be used to power a microcontroller
core, microcontroller I/O, memory or
other logic circuitry. Figure 5 shows
the step-down switching regulator
application circuit. The full-scale
output voltage for each step-down
switching regulator is programmed
using a resistor divider as shown in
the figure such that
 R1 
VOUTx = 0.8 V • 
+1
 R2 
Typical values of R1 are in the
range of 40kΩ to 1MΩ. The capacitor CFB cancels the pole created by
the feedback resistors and the input
capacitance of the FB pin, and also
helps to improve transient response
for output voltages much greater than
0.8V. A value of 10pF is recommended
for CFB for most applications.
All three of the step-down switching
regulators support 100% duty cycle
operation (low dropout mode) when
the input voltage drops very close to
the output voltage. Each regulator
VIN
EN
MODE
PWM
CONTROL
MP SWx
MN
L
CFB
R1
FBx
GND
0.8V
R2
VOUTx
COUT
can be individually enabled through
its respective enable pin.
A single MODE pin sets the three
voltage regulators in a high efficiency
Burst Mode operation (MODE = 1) or
low ripple pulse-skip mode (MODE =
0). For high enough load currents, in
either mode, the step-down switching regulators automatically switch
into constant frequency PWM mode
operation. The high 2.25MHz switching frequency allows the use of tiny
power inductors and stays out of the
AM Band.
The step-down switching regulators
also include soft-start to limit inrush
current when powering on, shortcircuit current protection and switch
node slew rate limiting circuitry to reduce EMI radiation. It is recommended
that the step-down switching regulator
input supplies (VIN1 and VIN2) be connected to the system supply pin (VOUT).
This allows the undervoltage lockout
circuit on the VOUT pin to disable the
step-down switching regulators from
operating outside the specified voltage range.
Power Sequencing using RST2
The RST2 open drain output responds
to step-down switching regulator 2 and
issues a Power ON reset signal 230ms
after the feedback voltage (FB2) rises to
within 8% of its final value. This output
can be pulled to a desired voltage level
using an external pull-up resistor and
used for sequencing power rails. For
example, it could be used to drive the
enable inputs of the other switching
regulators.
Conclusion
In summary, the LTC3557 provides a
highly integrated solution for handheld
and mobile applications in a compact
4mm × 4mm QFN package. The variety
of input power sources and externally
programmable output voltages make
it ideally suited for a broad range of
applications. The feature rich Li-Ion
charger provides protection against
several real-world fault conditions
while the versatile high frequency stepdown switching regulators provide
high efficiency power. L
Figure 5. Buck converter application circuit
28
Linear Technology Magazine • June 2007